Andrea Scoseria Katz
@andreascoseriakatz.bsky.social
Associate prof, WashULaw. ConLaw, legal history, the presidency, administrative law.
Pinned
Separation-of-Powers Lochnerism
One hundred and twenty years ago, the Supreme Court handed down one of the single most notorious opinions ever rendered, striking down a New York labor law for
papers.ssrn.com
Two new pieces from me on the Roberts Court, the presidency and the administrative state:
(1) Separation-of-Powers Lochnerism (papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....) and
(2) Taking Legality Seriously: What the Major Questions Doctrine Is - And Isn’t (with @BlochOfra)
(papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....)
(1) Separation-of-Powers Lochnerism (papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....) and
(2) Taking Legality Seriously: What the Major Questions Doctrine Is - And Isn’t (with @BlochOfra)
(papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....)
Reposted by Andrea Scoseria Katz
Worth a read. The purpose of the Citizenship Clause was *precisely* to prevent spun up theories based on hypothesized social contract, virtue, allegiance, community membership, etc., from being used to deny citizenship. The 14th Amendment means what it says.
My critique of the Randy Barnett/Ilan Wurman constitutional rationale for Trump's order on birthright citizenship: reason.com/volokh/2025/...
Birthright Citizenship - A Response to Barnett and Wurman
In a recent New York Times op ed, legal scholars Randy Barnett and Ilan Wurman offer a partial defense of President Trump's executive order denying
reason.com
February 15, 2025 at 10:18 PM
Worth a read. The purpose of the Citizenship Clause was *precisely* to prevent spun up theories based on hypothesized social contract, virtue, allegiance, community membership, etc., from being used to deny citizenship. The 14th Amendment means what it says.
Reposted by Andrea Scoseria Katz
I dug into the only US source cited by Randy Barnett & Ilan Wurman for their theory - against birthright citizenship - in @nytimes @nytopinion:
Edward Bates in 1862.
He doubly contradicted their argument:
"Birthright Citizenship: The Bates Backfire"
shugerblogcom.wordpress.com/2025/02/16/b...
Edward Bates in 1862.
He doubly contradicted their argument:
"Birthright Citizenship: The Bates Backfire"
shugerblogcom.wordpress.com/2025/02/16/b...
Birthright Citizenship: Barnett & Wurman’s NY Times Essay and their Bates Backfire
Randy Barnett & Ilan Wurman had a guest essay in the N.Y. Times on Feb. 15th: “Trump Might Have a Case on Birthright Citizenship.” The bottom line is that their essay backfires, bec…
shugerblogcom.wordpress.com
February 16, 2025 at 9:02 PM
I dug into the only US source cited by Randy Barnett & Ilan Wurman for their theory - against birthright citizenship - in @nytimes @nytopinion:
Edward Bates in 1862.
He doubly contradicted their argument:
"Birthright Citizenship: The Bates Backfire"
shugerblogcom.wordpress.com/2025/02/16/b...
Edward Bates in 1862.
He doubly contradicted their argument:
"Birthright Citizenship: The Bates Backfire"
shugerblogcom.wordpress.com/2025/02/16/b...
Reposted by Andrea Scoseria Katz
Per @stevevladeck.bsky.social, the DOJ intends to ask SCOTUS to overrule Humphrey’s Executor. That case has been in pro-unitary executive theorists’ crosshairs for years.
Short thread 🧵 of recommended reading on the unitary executive and independent agencies.
Short thread 🧵 of recommended reading on the unitary executive and independent agencies.
February 13, 2025 at 2:59 AM
Per @stevevladeck.bsky.social, the DOJ intends to ask SCOTUS to overrule Humphrey’s Executor. That case has been in pro-unitary executive theorists’ crosshairs for years.
Short thread 🧵 of recommended reading on the unitary executive and independent agencies.
Short thread 🧵 of recommended reading on the unitary executive and independent agencies.
Reposted by Andrea Scoseria Katz
AUSA Hagan Scotten, former clerk for John Roberts, really put some mustard on his resignation letter.
February 14, 2025 at 3:43 PM
AUSA Hagan Scotten, former clerk for John Roberts, really put some mustard on his resignation letter.
Reposted by Andrea Scoseria Katz
DOJ leadership has put all Public Integrity Section lawyers into a room with 1 hour to decide who will dismiss Adams indictment or else all will be fired. Sending them strength to stand by their oath, which is to support the Constitution, not the president’s political agenda. 🇺🇸
February 14, 2025 at 4:01 PM
DOJ leadership has put all Public Integrity Section lawyers into a room with 1 hour to decide who will dismiss Adams indictment or else all will be fired. Sending them strength to stand by their oath, which is to support the Constitution, not the president’s political agenda. 🇺🇸
Two new pieces from me on the Roberts Court, the presidency and the administrative state:
(1) Separation-of-Powers Lochnerism (papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....) and
(2) Taking Legality Seriously: What the Major Questions Doctrine Is - And Isn’t (with @BlochOfra)
(papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....)
(1) Separation-of-Powers Lochnerism (papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....) and
(2) Taking Legality Seriously: What the Major Questions Doctrine Is - And Isn’t (with @BlochOfra)
(papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....)
Separation-of-Powers Lochnerism
One hundred and twenty years ago, the Supreme Court handed down one of the single most notorious opinions ever rendered, striking down a New York labor law for
papers.ssrn.com
February 9, 2025 at 11:29 PM
Two new pieces from me on the Roberts Court, the presidency and the administrative state:
(1) Separation-of-Powers Lochnerism (papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....) and
(2) Taking Legality Seriously: What the Major Questions Doctrine Is - And Isn’t (with @BlochOfra)
(papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....)
(1) Separation-of-Powers Lochnerism (papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....) and
(2) Taking Legality Seriously: What the Major Questions Doctrine Is - And Isn’t (with @BlochOfra)
(papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....)
Reposted by Andrea Scoseria Katz
Ofc the giant question is whether decisions like Loper Bright construing the APA and limiting agencies will affect SCOTUS’s reading of Article II to limit presidential power. Good news: Most statutes delegate their implementation to agencies. Bad news: civil service laws delegate directly to Prez.
February 3, 2025 at 4:13 PM
Ofc the giant question is whether decisions like Loper Bright construing the APA and limiting agencies will affect SCOTUS’s reading of Article II to limit presidential power. Good news: Most statutes delegate their implementation to agencies. Bad news: civil service laws delegate directly to Prez.
Reposted by Andrea Scoseria Katz
Not to be missed — including a new article by the always brilliant @andreascoseriakatz.bsky.social!
The new issues of the Journal of American Constitutional History is now available:
Journal of American Constitutional History
The Journal of American Constitutional History is a peer-reviewed web-based journal publishing high-quality scholarship on U.S. constitutional history. Our editorial board includes over 60 leading…
buff.ly
November 21, 2024 at 1:47 PM
Not to be missed — including a new article by the always brilliant @andreascoseriakatz.bsky.social!
Reposted by Andrea Scoseria Katz
The new issues of the Journal of American Constitutional History is now available:
Journal of American Constitutional History
The Journal of American Constitutional History is a peer-reviewed web-based journal publishing high-quality scholarship on U.S. constitutional history. Our editorial board includes over 60 leading…
buff.ly
November 21, 2024 at 1:45 PM
The new issues of the Journal of American Constitutional History is now available:
Happy to see this in print!
jach.law.wisc.edu/regime-of-st...
Basically, I argue that the modern president is built earlier than we generally understand—Reconstruction/Gilded Age—and piece by piece, out of statutes where Congress delegated powers to the office. (1/3)
jach.law.wisc.edu/regime-of-st...
Basically, I argue that the modern president is built earlier than we generally understand—Reconstruction/Gilded Age—and piece by piece, out of statutes where Congress delegated powers to the office. (1/3)
A Regime of Statutes: Building the Modern President in Gilded Age America (1873-1921)
by Andrea Scoseria Katz
At a time when the Supreme Court is turning its sights on the administrative state and enhancing the profile and powers of the president, it is worth recalling that behind our ...
jach.law.wisc.edu
November 18, 2024 at 10:39 PM
Happy to see this in print!
jach.law.wisc.edu/regime-of-st...
Basically, I argue that the modern president is built earlier than we generally understand—Reconstruction/Gilded Age—and piece by piece, out of statutes where Congress delegated powers to the office. (1/3)
jach.law.wisc.edu/regime-of-st...
Basically, I argue that the modern president is built earlier than we generally understand—Reconstruction/Gilded Age—and piece by piece, out of statutes where Congress delegated powers to the office. (1/3)
My co-author @narosenblum.bsky.social and I explain what's wrong with Myers and the Court's current thinking on the presidency (2/2):
columbialawreview.org/content/beco...
columbialawreview.org/content/beco...
BECOMING THE ADMINISTRATOR-IN-CHIEF: MYERS AND THE PROGRESSIVE PRESIDENCY - Columbia Law Review
“Inherent power! . . . The partisans of the executive have discovered a [new] and more fruitful source of power.” — Sen. Henry Clay, Senate Debate of 1835. “We elect a king for four years, and...
columbialawreview.org
December 3, 2023 at 11:13 PM
My co-author @narosenblum.bsky.social and I explain what's wrong with Myers and the Court's current thinking on the presidency (2/2):
columbialawreview.org/content/beco...
columbialawreview.org/content/beco...
Here's some new work of mine. SCOTUS's current view of the president rests largely on one case, Myers v US (1926). But Myers is a false friend: it took a sharp detour from past separation-of-powers cases, misread history and precedent, and created nothing like the presidency we have today (1/2)
December 3, 2023 at 11:11 PM
Here's some new work of mine. SCOTUS's current view of the president rests largely on one case, Myers v US (1926). But Myers is a false friend: it took a sharp detour from past separation-of-powers cases, misread history and precedent, and created nothing like the presidency we have today (1/2)
Hello Bluesky! I'm tentatively glad to be here.
December 3, 2023 at 11:09 PM
Hello Bluesky! I'm tentatively glad to be here.